(iii.) Cobitidinae.—Maxillaries not bordering the mouth; barbels three to six pairs; pharyngeal teeth in one row, in moderate number. Anterior part of the air-bladder divided into a right and left chamber separated by a constriction, and enclosed in a bony capsule, the posterior part free, or absent. Loaches, characterised externally by a low, elongate body, without or with minute scales. Europe, Asia, Abyssinia. Miocene of Oeningen.
Principal genera:—Botia, Lefua, Diplophysa, Nemachilus, Misgurnus, Cobitis, Lepidocephalichthys, Acanthophthalmus, Eucirrhichthys, Apua.
(iv.) Homalopterinae.—Maxillaries not bordering the mouth, which is inferior; barbels three or four pairs; pharyngeal teeth in one row, in moderate number. Air-bladder rudimentary, divided into two lateral halves, encased in a bony capsule. Mountain forms with depressed head and horizontally expanded paired fins. China, India, Further India, Malay Peninsula and Archipelago.
Genera:—Homaloptera, Helgia, Glaniopsis, Gastromyzon.
The recently described Gyrinochilus, from Borneo, resembling Homaloptera in habit, with two gill-clefts on each side, an upper and a lower, a tadpole-like mouth without barbels, and a small, free air-bladder, should probably be regarded as the type of a fifth sub-family.
Many of the genera of the Cyprininae are partly founded on the shape and the disposition of the pharyngeal teeth, which, adapted to various requirements, may be conical, hooked, spoon-shaped, molariform, etc., etc. The importance attached to the disposition of these teeth in one, two, or three series for the definition of genera, has been rather exaggerated.[[661]]
Fig. 352.—Lower pharyngeals of Barbus tropidolepis.
Fig. 353.—Labeo falcifer, from the Congo, showing nuptial tubercles on the snout. ¼ nat. size.